Masters of Interior Space

Masters of Interior Space

So Shine is the debut album by brothersister 

10 new original Catholic Christian songs

Music & Lyrics by Fr. Lawrence Edward Tucker, SOLT

“‘So Shine’ strikes an excellent balance between Catholic hymns and classic rock.” – Check out the review at Aleteia.org

Masters of Interior Space: A Novel about the Spiritual Life

by Fr. Lawrence Tucker, SOLT

Is it possible that the real threat to Man’s future is not energy, climate change, or a host of other potential calamities we hear about on a daily basis? Could it be that the greatest danger Man faces is his own lack of spiritual insight and development? Ride along with three college students and a university professor as they fulfill a special mission given them by God to address this very question. Hold on to your camel for the adventure of a lifetime with the… Masters of Interior Space.
 
Paperback $14.95 | Kindle $9.99

Back cover and interior artwork by Emiliano Gil

DEDICATION

 This book is dedicated to the happy memory of  Fr. Joseph C. Henchey, CSS, STD (6/2/1930 – 4/7/2021), a teacher, and a true Master of Interior Space. Two of his retreats are below: By His Wounds, about the wounds of Christ, and Duc in Altum, about the life of St. Peter.

TESTIMONIALS

“Like C.S. Lewis on steroids.” —Dr. Cynthia Toolin-Wilson, author of Survivor: A Memoir of Forgiveness

“Do you want to grow in the spiritual life, more and more united to Jesus? Perhaps you’ve read the spiritual classics but need a new boost? Fr. Larry’s fast-paced, exciting, contemporary, brilliant novel may be just what you need. Full of surprises… I loved it!” —Dr. Ronda Chervin: Catholic TV and Radio Presenter, Spiritual Writer and Professor of Philosophy

“Relevant and timely to today’s world, Masters of Interior Space delves into the story of three brilliant, Christ-focused young adults, a spiritually driven professor, a burro, and a Fennec Fox who form an unforgettable friendship and are called to a very important mission by God Himself. Throughout their travels from the Sahara Desert to New York City, the reader will see how the four main protagonists grow in the Spirit of Christ. Into the heart of the city, they inspire others to abandon the mundane, inner trappings of the world and to realize there is something bigger than themselves. Fr. Lawrence Tucker speaks to the hearts of the struggling, modern youth, encouraging them to look past the worldly issues that hinder our society and to rediscover faith in God, the true solution to today’s troubles.” Danielle Mesa, author of Cardelina

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Fr. Tucker was born on May 26th, 1955, in Manhattan, New York City. He is a bilingual missionary priest in The Society of Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity and has served in Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, England, Texas, and New York.

Fr. Tucker holds an A.A. in Liberal Arts from Nassau Community College, Garden City, NY; a B.A. in Human Relations from St. Joseph’s College, Patchogue, NY; and a Master of Divinity, as well as an M.A. in Theology, From Holy Apostles College and Seminary, Cromwell, CT.

OTHER CATHOLIC LITERARY WORKS

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The Sea Lord’s Bookshelf by Vincent Salamoni, M.S.A.

The Sea Lord’s Bookshelf by Vincent Salamoni, M.S.A.

LORD, HAVE MERCY:

The big ocean and our little boat.

The Sea Lord’s Bookshelf

by Reverend Vincent A. Salamoni, M.S.A.

This book is a catalyst, of a beginning voyage. Here it is a short one, yet a long interesting one. It starts a new genre / category / oeuvre. It is a prototype book. These are commentaries of special nautical books about virtues. The collection includes previews of past and future voyages. In words, it develops a nautical spirituality.

[Only 25 pages!]

Paperback: $3.99 | PDF: Free

TESTIMONIALS

“You are doing great work!” – Bishop Joseph L Coffey, Vicar for Veterans Affairs, Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA

“Keep up the good work Father. I enjoyed watching your interview.” – Sr. Maria Salerno OSF, PhD. Assistant archivist, Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Fr. Vincent A. Salamoni, M.S.A. (Vincent Gaspar Anthony Rizzuti Salamoni), is a member of the Society of the Missionaries of the Holy Apostles (M.S.A.). Their charism is to promote, form and accompany vocations to the priesthood and other ministries.

He ministered from on board from a dugout canoe in the Peruvian Amazon to on board the USS ENTERPRISE (CVN-65) nuclear air carrier, which is not the starship!

He is retired from in the Chaplain Corps of the United States Navy.

Now, he is a Provincial Emeritus of the MSA-USA and is being through, with, and in, the Mercy Ocean.

An Autobiography (abridged)

CHILDHOOD:

My four grandparents born in Sicily. They went to New York City, in approximately their twenties. They lived in the USA about 50 years and never spoke English. My father was 6 years old when he arrived in NYC. My mother was born in the USA; some of her siblings were born in Sicily. My father was an iconic NYC taxi driver for over 40 years. My mother worked as a seamstress in the NYC garment industry, and afterwards was a full-time housewife. I have three older sisters … extended biological family …

EXPERIMENTAL:

The development of my worldview: Received a bachelor’s degree in psychology. Worked 5 years in the insurance industry. Sailed 2 years in the U.S. Navy as a Radarman / Operations Specialist. Became a Vietnam veteran.

PRIESTHOOD:

Ordained in 1984; theological studies: 2 years in USA, 2 years in Rome. Missionaries of the Holy Apostles (M.S.A.)  2 years in Vicariate Apostolic San José del Amazonas (Peru); 1 year Connecticut; 2 years near Lima, 6 years near Caracas. U.S. Navy, Chaplain Corps: 13 active years: including – Okinawa; USS ENTERPRISE, not a starship, rather an aircraft carrier; Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; Iceland; Virginia; San Diego, Naval Hospital; Puerto Rico/Virgin Islands et cetera. Emeritus USA-MSA Provincial Animator (Superior) “Pastoral” Pasture

“After a dangerous voyage, at last I am in sight of the port I have been trying to get to for so long. I shall now be able to enjoy my God … and I shall be freed from a heavy load which I just can’t bear.” – Saint Louis of Anjou, on his deathbed

[Cited in THE MERCY OCEAN.]

For the Love of God: The Sacred Heart and the Divine Mercy

For the Love of God: The Sacred Heart and the Divine Mercy

For the Love of God: The Sacred Heart and the Divine Mercy

Kristina R. Olsen

The purpose of this book is to invite you into the Sacred Heart of Jesus to experience his love, and to introduce you to the Divine Mercy devotion to encounter God’s limitless forgiveness. We show how the Divine Mercy devotion is an extension and completion of the Sacred Heart devotion, and we draw parallels from the lives of St. Margaret Mary Alacoque and St. Faustina Kowalska to highlight many similarities in their lives and work.

Paperback $17.95 | Kindle $9.99

Testimonials

“Exquisite. Beautiful. Inspired and inspiring! This work reached down into my heart and set it aflame. I literally could not put it down, from start to finish.” – Shane Kapler, author of Marrying the Rosary to the Divine Mercy Chaplet and The Biblical Roots of Marian Consecration

About the Author

Dr. Kristina Olsen has a Ph.D. in Theology from Catholic University of America (CUA) and an M.A. in Theology from Franciscan University of Steubenville. She teaches at Holy Apostles College and Seminary and at CUA. Dr. Olsen also holds a D.B.A. in Business Administration (U. of Md.) and an M.S. in Computer Science. She currently works in Information Technology for the City of Philadelphia. She is a member of the Secular Order of Discalced Carmelites (OCDS).

OTHER CATHOLIC SPIRITUALITY BOOKS

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Leadership: A journey toward world peace – Vol. 1 How we build our greatness and leadership impacting the political economy and decision making

Leadership: A journey toward world peace – Vol. 1 How we build our greatness and leadership impacting the political economy and decision making

Leadership: A journey toward world peace – Vol. 1 How we build our greatness and leadership impacting the political economy and decision making

by Juan Pablo Stegmann, Ph.D.

Everyone wants to be a leader; however, how do we build our leadership? How can we build leadership with greatness to positively impact our lives and society? How does a leadership culture benefits society? This series invites us on a journey to build greatness and leadership, positively impacting the culture, political economy, and decision-making. It promotes the integration of knowledge, helping to integrate the individual and society, providing an interdisciplinary vision. This work results from a solid research effort supported by more than 800 bibliographic sources and statistical analyses. This volume 1 summarizes the following three volumes discussing how to build greatness and leadership (volume 2), to transform the political economy by promoting economic growth, social justice, social integration and social harmony (volume 3), and to transform decision-making, strategic management, business ethics, and corporate social responsibility, by promoting organizational success and social well-being (volume 4), toward world peace.

 
Paperback $9.99 | Kindle $9.99
1. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The cognitive dimension.
2. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The transcendental dimension.
3. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The axiological dimension.
4. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The religious dimension.
5. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The relational dimension.
6. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The discernment dimension.
7. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The existential dimension.
8. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The transformational dimension.
9. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The healing dimension.
10. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The social action dimension.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

When Dr. Juan Pablo Stegmann turned 40, he decided to dedicate his life to deepen the understanding of the impact of spirituality in our lives, especially in the lives of vulnerable and suffering people. This required ample study and research to provide solid interdisciplinary foundations: he completed three doctoral dissertations, three master’s degrees, and three postgraduate programs in economics, management, finance, philosophy/ethics, international business administration, engineering, and spirituality, obtained in the United States, Europe and Latin America. He is the author of several books and articles published in the United States and abroad. He teaches a wide range of graduate and undergraduate courses, receiving important academic honors. Previous to this he held senior positions in most areas of the organization in leading multinational companies and worked with prestigious global consulting firms. He has been involved in various community service and volunteer activities. 

 

 

REVIEW BY PETER REDPATH

     While, by nature, in some respect, all somewhat psychologically healthy human beings desire to become leaders at some organizational activity in this life, precisely puzzling to answer are the questions: (1) Why, by nature, do we chiefly do so? (2) What is the nature of leadership in general and great leadership especially; and (3) How does anyone become a great leader?

     Most puzzling to some readers related to the work for which I am happily writing this testimonial might be the central idea of Juan Pablo Stegmann’s 4-volume, magisterial tome that attempts exhaustively to answer these questions. As he states toward the start of Volume 1: “The central idea of the book is how spirituality builds greatness and leadership, how these improve personal and social reality, creating a culture of leadership, improving the political economy and management of organizations.”

     In our contemporary, cynical global political and business culture we often hear the sophomoric quip, “Business ethics is an oxymoron.”  Despite the fact that all human leadership is a psychological activity (activity of the human soul) this same global political and business culture would likely incline to mock as oxymoronic and evidently foolish the claim that spirituality builds greatness and leadership. The entire New World Order appears Hell-belt on convincing all such cultural rubes who think this way the truth of the contrary opposite–that spirituality impedes leadership and destroys culturesI

     Juan Pablo Stegmann is no fool. Nor is he someone unfamiliar with businesses and how to build leaders. He has a wide international business and academic background that includes holding 3 Ph.D degrees; 3 Masters degrees; a B.S.; and three postgraduate works in economics, finance, business strategy.

     He has held senior leadership positions in almost every area of national and international business organization. These include general management, investment and commercial banking, finance, and strategic and knowledge management at leading multinational firms like Citibank, Bank of America, N.M. Rothchild (UK), and Telefonica. He also worked with leading consulting firms, such as McKinsey, Boston Consulting, A. T.  Kearney, Booz Allen, and others.

     He has published several books prior to this present multi-volume work and has taught a wide spectrum of graduate and undergraduate courses in management, strategic management, integrated enterprise management, enterpreneurship, organization theory and behavior, foundations of business, international business, cross cultural communications, cultural environment global business, business consulting, business ethics, economics, international economics, financial management, strategic resources management, and quantitative methods.

     I am most humbled that he considers me to be among his mentors. In this respect, I am especially delighted to note how, with some small assistance from my research, he has mastered the realization that the moral virtue of prudence (which creates in children and students the moral habit of docilitas [teachability!]) is a species of uncommon common sense that underlies all cultural and organizational development.

     Evident to any psychologically human being is that, absent the moral and the practical virtue of intellectual prudence, no healthy human individual, organization, or culture can ever develop any habitual common sense–much less a level of habitual uncommon sense needed to grow and flourish longterm.

     I encourage you to buy the 4-volumes linked to immediately below and tell others about them so that you and they can stand on the shoulders of a true organizational giant and learn how to apply these simple truths on a daily basis to improve all aspects of your daily life and that of the rest of us.

 

Peter A. Redpath is rector of The Adler-Aquinas Institute; CEO of the Aquinas School of Leadership; co-founder of the Gilson Society (USA), The International Etienne Gilson Society; and Founding Chairman of the Board of the Angelicum Academy. Presently Chair of the Thomistic Studies Graduate Concentration in Christian Wisdom at Holy Apostles College and Seminary, he is author/editor of 12 philosophical books and many articles and book reviews.

REVIEW BY LEIF EDVINSSON

     The work presented and packaged in the impressive three volumes has significant contributions to Leadership thought. It is very timely and apt, as we are in a time of rough/stormy knowledge navigation.

     The work’s title, “A journey toward world peace”, introduces an ongoing renewal process toward a better future, two dimensions of Intellectual Capital (IC). The subtitles of the three books, creating Leadership to transform the political economy and organizations, reinforce the connection with IC’s process and renewal dimensions. Volume 2 focuses on the crucial role of spirituality in promoting inspiration and creation for the success of society, emphasizing the renewal dimension of IC. The first chapter focuses on creating knowledge and relationships, the two other dimensions of the IC. The following chapters explain the impact of knowledge creation, generating a vision of the future, building higher values, creating a Leadership culture, and promoting a continuous individual and social transformation process. Volume 2 concludes that spirituality promotes greatness and Leadership, introducing an understanding of Leadership as an ongoing renewal process with a social orientation. Volumes 3 and 4 investigate how our greatness and Leadership enrich the IC of nations and organizations, promoting social welfare.

     Leadership is a challenging task, amplified by global geopolitics and the core of 3-dimensional knowledge navigation. The political economy is more than ever very dynamic. Part of it might be handled by learning life cycle maps from the late prof Jay Forrester at MIT. But also integrating forward into the contributions from Quantum Physics and Life Science, for example, genetic research. Such cultivation might offer life science perspectives to the old Leadership paradigms, as it will amplify the continuous RENEWAL dimensions beyond the often one-dimensional economic paradigm of growth.

     Such navigation might be much more complex and require Leadership, as said above, of 3 D-dimensions.  But also a renewal of the agenda of Leadership, in itself. A Leadership of flow rather than stock. Some core dimensions of Leadership are still related to the geophysics of the Longitude theory. Consequently, Leadership navigation is about position, direction, and speed. A harmonizing Leadership by modern GPS tools.

     Perhaps we need to innovate and upgrade the new institutional Agency for Social Welfare navigation. The Agency for this new Leadership might operate with a much more refined compass. Core metrics will be in the eco dimensions and flow of welfare beyond the bulk thinking.

     As prof. Johan Rockström, Potsdam Environmental Institute, is advocating that we need to initiate the thrust as a global knowledge alliance to initiate, prototype, and cultivate the new sailing course for future generations after the Industrial Economics Era.

     A growing, dynamic paradigm of Life Science presents a Leadership role much more integrated with multi-talented knowing. The dynamics in a new agile agency of a networked global construct are more characterized by Intangibles, soft assets, and vivid flow, close to a DAO – Decentralized  Autonomous Organisation.

     This new Agency might be prototyped in a cross-disciplinary lab setup like we once prototyped in Skandia Future Center, Sweden. A new Navigation school and training program might be considered to initiate further learning and prototyping.

     The escalating opportunity is waiting for our and your new initiatives.

 

Leif Edvinsson Ph.D. The World´s first director of Intellectual Capital, Skandia. The Worlds´ first holder of Professorship on Intellectual Capital Lund University, Sweden. Professor at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Appointed the Brain of the Year, The KEN Practitioner of the Year. Listed in The World´s 50 Most Influential Thinkers. Listed in Who is Who in the World. Luminary Award 2013 by Peter Drucker Foundation, Intel and European Commission for Thought Leadership. Knowledge Award 2017 together with UN.

REVIEW BY ALEJANDRO PREUSCHE

     Juan Pablo Stegmann’s masterpiece

     First and foremost, this is a monumental piece of work. It is the expected outcome of a wonderful life journey devoted to rigorous researching, generous teaching, insightful writing and more importantly, to self-development and renewal. It hits the sweet spot of the balance between the personal and the professional lives.

     As I read it, I saw the personal quest Stegmann initiated years ago which resulted in a marvelous synthesis between civilization, culture, and business pragmatism: that spirituality is at the center of our lives. This is the fountain of coherence that he has found and that he now shares with everyone seeking a fulfilling life in the world of business. On a personal note, the book allowed me to take stock of my own personal and professional journey. Lots of insights and reflections. I want to share some with the readers as well.  

     The book highlights spirituality’s role in building greatness and leadership, transforming the political economy and the business reality. I have seen countless examples of great business leaders who testified to the centrality of spirituality. Enrique Shaw was a successful business leader, a great human being, the founder of ACDE (Christian Association of Business Leaders), an extraordinary institution I had the honor to preside in. In line with the book’s insights, he promoted the mission of the business leader as linked to the fulfillment of three duties: service, progress, and human advancement. For him, the company was a community of life, an instrument for the dignification of the person. No wonder Shaw is in a canonization process in the Vatican.

     The book provides a powerful interdisciplinary approach, connecting strategic management and political economy with our spirituality, greatness, and leadership. This was a challenge, as it required first simplifying and streamlining all strategic management and business disciplines in a simple model, incorporating the role of resources, something that I have done at McKinsey for years as a consultant and its CEO in Argentina.

     As the book states, several Nobel Prize winners and the prestigious Strategic Management Society during the last decades have supported incorporating resources and economic thinking into strategic management. The book goes a step further and investigates how the greatness and leadership of everyone, of each stakeholder, provide crucial resources, human capital, social capital, process, and renewal capital, promoting the success of the organization and the community, providing a strongly needed human approach to strategic management. As an active member of the Impact Investing Movement (investments with an explicit intention and objective to deliver positive, meaningful, and measurable social or environmental outcomes in underserved areas, alongside a financial return), I strongly believe this is the crucial condition for success. Sustainable social and environmental impact is achieved through business innovation, only when their leaders are driven by a genuine orientation to those less privileged. Only this attitude will help bring about peace and progress.

     The book also highlights the role of discernment, and its interaction with strategic management, solving strategic dilemmas for the organization’s success and social welfare. On my experience as a career coach to several hundred McKinsey Partners all over the world in the last 20 years, I have been privy to the crucial role of discernment in making high impact decisions. Any business leader, in fact, any leader, should get familiar with Stegmann’s comprehensive contribution to their success. This book is a must-read for any leader. It will surely become the main reference for those who want to lead a purposeful life. 

 

Alejandro Federico Preusche, MS Engineering Universidad Catolica Argentina and MBA Stanford University. Former President of ACDE (Christian Association of Business Leaders), former consultant and CEO McKinsey & Company, Argentina, former a member of the Justice and Peace Commission of the Argentine Episcopal Conference, founder and Manager of Almado, a consulting and impact business developer, member of the Global Impact Investments Group.

REVIEW BY NARCISO MUÑOZ

     Perhaps the idea that best summarizes this monumental work developed by Juan Pablo Stegmann is the passage of the Good Samaritan, who helped a homeless, wounded and helpless man: it was neither the markets, nor the governments, but a man with a good heart.

     For the past 5 years, with our families, friends and 500 volunteers, we helped the homeless of Miami, and along with them veterans, migrants, families, the elderly. We visited the streets where they are concentrated, supporting them with resources to improve their situation, recomposing their lives (health, work, finances, socialization and even spiritual support), trying to reunite them with their families, incorporating them into recovery programs, getting them permanent or transitional housing. Numerous donors and the state have supported us, providing 20 houses where the homeless can live, finding a community where they feel supported and regain their dignity.

     “Hermanos de la Calle” brings together people who want to help, with those who need that help, helping to rehabilitate more than 100 homeless people in Miami per month, 30% of them children, and is expanding to other U.S. cities. Our task is to see the person, with his or her dignity, behind each homeless person, to help him or her transform and reintegrate into society.

     As this book states, spirituality has been the driving force that led us to undertake this work; our spirituality is what makes us people, different from animals, it makes us brothers, it empowers us, it gives us that supernatural spark that we have and that we forget we have, or we do not dare to use it, or we were convinced that it is not there: but it is there. And when we use it, we impact many people, who begin to feel useful, unique and necessary. Our spirituality enhances and rediscovers that foggy mirror where we look for ourselves and sometimes, we do not see ourselves. Our spirituality brings us closer to God because we are made in his image and likeness, we have a little piece of God inside us.

     I hope that many will read this book, so that it will help them to walk a path of personal and community growth, to discover the extraordinary value that spirituality has in our lives, to make us grow, be transformed, and to transform society in order to build a better world.

 

Narciso Muñoz, CFA, MS Political Sciences. President Hermanos de la Calle Foundation. Managing Director Alex Brown, a Division of Raymond James.

REVIEW BY JEFF STEAGALL

     Stegmann provides a thoughtful new approach to modern economics. Moving beyond the twentieth-century focus on rationality, Stegmann carefully integrates spirituality as a key input for economic and social growth. He cleverly shows how this approach leads to increased happiness, goodness, beauty, truth and unity, offering a vision for a better future for both individuals and society. Stegmann’s paradigm challenges us to re-evaluate what leadership means. He argues persuasively that leadership is the key component to personal and societal evolution, offering a statistical analysis that demonstrates that leadership correlates better with the most desirable social outcomes than either individualism or collectivism. Given the frightening situation that the left-versus-right paradigm has generated in our world, Stegmann’s work should be required reading for anyone interested in leadership, economic growth, societal evolution and global improvement.

 

Jeff Steagall Ph.D. Professor of economics, Buehler Chair in Leadership and former dean of the John B. Goddard School of Business & Economics at Weber State University. At University of North Florida former professor of economics, winner of multiple awards, creator and leader of the international business program which became one of four UNF flagship programs.

REVIEW BY ANDRES GALLO

     The work of Juan Pablo Stegmann is an intellectual endeavor of great importance for our culture of confrontation and extremism. Stegmann delves into deep spiritual and philosophical traditions to bring a bridge to solve matters at the individual, corporate and national levels. This is an impressive work, which should help all of us to question and understand the diversity of decisions we face both personally, at our companies, and as members of society.

     This work starts at the personal level, looking for the significant impact of spirituality on our way of thinking and how our spiritual efforts impact our views and attitudes towards life problems. According to Stegmann’s research, spirituality is the source of our greatness and leadership. It builds our capacity to lead and approach our lives’ challenges.

     Second, our leadership strengthens human, social, renewal, and process capital, which Edvinsson calls intellectual capital, the engine of economic growth, social justice, competitiveness, and problem-solving at the micro and macro levels. Accordingly, Stegmann refers to ten dimensions of spirituality linked to creating intellectual capital in society.

     Third, Stegmann takes this framework into the political economy arena to create alternative solutions to the more traditional collectivist and individualist approaches. He shows the strengths and limitations of the epistemological foundations of both approaches, which is crucial to ending their confrontations. A leadership culture relies on a realist epistemology which eliminates the social fragmentation and radicalization generated by the confrontation between left and right, empowered by social media and populism. A leadership culture promotes knowledge and relationships, pillars of intellectual capital, social integration, and social harmony.

     Stegmann closes this intellectual journey with a positive and hopeful framework that people can use to improve decision-making. He started with a very theoretical and abstract development of spirituality and guided us to a practical and applicable improvement framework. His examples and descriptions help the reader through this journey and bring the value of our spiritual growth in our lives.

     This book can be extremely valuable for politicians, economists, business leaders, and any citizen to incorporate a new approach that promotes economic growth, social justice, and social harmony, creating a third political economy orientation based on leadership to solve unsolvable today’s problems. Furthermore, this book can be extremely valuable for anyone to learn how to build a leadership culture, transforming the person and society toward world peace.

 

Professor and Richard deRaismes Kip fellow at the Department of Economics and Geography and Director of the Flagship program in International Business at the Coggin College of Business, University of North Florida. Ph.D. in Economics at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. He has several publications in prestigious research journals.

OTHER CATHOLIC BUSINESS AND EDUCATION BOOKS

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Leadership: A journey toward world peace – Vol. 2 Spirituality builds happiness, greatness, and leadership

Leadership: A journey toward world peace – Vol. 2 Spirituality builds happiness, greatness, and leadership

Leadership: A journey toward world peace – Vol. 2 Spirituality builds happiness, greatness, and leadership

by Juan Pablo Stegmann, Ph.D.

Everyone wants to be a leader; however, how do we build our leadership? How can we build leadership with greatness to positively impact our lives and society? This series invites us on a journey to build greatness and leadership, positively impacting the culture, political economy, and decision-making. 

This book is the beginning of the journey of this series: “Leadership: A Journey Toward World Peace,” showing how spirituality is an essential part of a person’s life and happiness and crucial for the functioning of society, culture, political economy and management of organizations. This book helps us discover our spirituality, strengthen it, and incorporate it as a conscious part of our lives, to live our life positively, resolving its complexities and challenges. Our spirituality helps to build knowledge, discover beauty, goodness, truth and our higher values, discover God’s presence in our lives, building our relationship with Him and a better world, building relationships based on values and love, building discernment, finding the meaning of our lives helping us to solve suffering, inspiring and energizing us to transform reality, healing ourselves, driving us to undertake social actions, social change. This book introduces a new agenda, promoting a different world in which spirituality, greatness and leadership solve problems that today seem unsolvable. This work results from a solid research effort, supported by more than 800 bibliographic sources and statistical analyses.

 
Paperback $24.99 | Kindle $9.99
1. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The cognitive dimension.
2. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The transcendental dimension.
3. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The axiological dimension.
4. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The religious dimension.
5. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The relational dimension.
6. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The discernment dimension.
7. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The existential dimension.
8. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The transformational dimension.
9. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The healing dimension.
10. Spirituality and Leadership Workshop. The social action dimension.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

When Dr. Juan Pablo Stegmann turned 40, he decided to dedicate his life to deepen the understanding of the impact of spirituality in our lives, especially in the lives of vulnerable and suffering people. This required ample study and research to provide solid interdisciplinary foundations: he completed three doctoral dissertations, three master’s degrees, and three postgraduate programs in economics, management, finance, philosophy/ethics, international business administration, engineering, and spirituality, obtained in the United States, Europe and Latin America. He is the author of several books and articles published in the United States and abroad. He teaches a wide range of graduate and undergraduate courses, receiving important academic honors. Previous to this he held senior positions in most areas of the organization in leading multinational companies and worked with prestigious global consulting firms. He has been involved in various community service and volunteer activities. 

REVIEW BY HEATHER M. ERB

The title of Dr. Stegmann’s volume indicates the content and purpose of his current work, which is to examine how the reservoirs of spirituality serve the goals of human happiness, fortify the human spirit in greatness, and effect various forms of leadership in society. He weaves scholarly sources and insights together with supportive popular sources, providing a solid background for his applications of happiness and greatness to the study of organizational leadership.

The key definitions in the text are presented in each case as the culmination of comparison of four key concepts: spirituality, happiness, greatness, and leadership; the author also links the theme of spirituality and leadership to the achievement of “world peace”.

After outlining the key definitions in the first chapter, which is both comprehensive and foundational, the author frames the text by exploring the “dimensions of greatness” which “spirituality builds in every person and community”, leading to happiness and world peace. The transforming virtues that help us find meaning in suffering, grow in discernment, and transform and heal both self and society, are discussed in relation to the foundational topics of the book – happiness, greatness, and leadership– which is developed through both religious, philosophical, psychological and classical sources.

A key strength of Stegmann’s analysis is its use of a broad variety of sources and spiritual traditions through the ages, both East and West, religious and secular, philosophical and psychological.  He deftly weaves themes such as the spiritual tradition of the threefold way in its various senses in various contexts, emphasizing the continuity of natural, revealed, and mystical theologies.

The informative use of charts lends appeal and organization to various interconnected themes, while the sheer breadth of materials is deployed with a systematic goal in mind, namely, to show how a wealth of intellectual and spiritual traditions develop tools for achieving greatness, which serves both spirituality, leadership, social action and personal happiness.

Very helpful are the chapter summaries and the detailed use of references for the various definitions and distinctions the author draws, as well as frequent chronologically ordered subtitles signaling the thinkers and ideas he is discussing.

In conclusion, Stegmann has offered us an extremely thorough and fascinating volume, rare in its vision and achievement of joining modern concerns in the temporal order to the classical and Christian roots of social action as found in the human person as an image of God.  It is both a useful and inspirational tool for work in spirituality, leadership studies, and theology.

 

Dr. Heather M. Erb, professor of philosophy and religious studies, Commonwealth University of Pennsylvania, Penn State, Lock Haven University, Fordham, St. Francis (Loretto, PA), and University of Toronto. Ph.D. and master’s in philosophy and religious studies (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium), and St. Michael’s College (University of Toronto), and author of The Path of Spiritual Happiness

REVIEW BY PETER REDPATH

While, by nature, in some respect, all somewhat psychologically healthy human beings desire to become leaders at some organizational activity in this life, precisely puzzling to answer are the questions: (1) Why, by nature, do we chiefly do so? (2) What is the nature of leadership in general and great leadership especially; and (3) How does anyone become a great leader?

Most puzzling to some readers related to the work for which I am happily writing this testimonial might be the central idea of Juan Pablo Stegmann’s 4-volume, magisterial tome that attempts exhaustively to answer these questions. As he states toward the start of Volume 1: “The central idea of the book is how spirituality builds greatness and leadership, how these improve personal and social reality, creating a culture of leadership, improving the political economy and management of organizations.”

In our contemporary, cynical global political and business culture we often hear the sophomoric quip, “Business ethics is an oxymoron.”  Despite the fact that all human leadership is a psychological activity (activity of the human soul) this same global political and business culture would likely incline to mock as oxymoronic and evidently foolish the claim that spirituality builds greatness and leadership. The entire New World Order appears Hell-belt on convincing all such cultural rubes who think this way the truth of the contrary opposite–that spirituality impedes leadership and destroys culturesI

Juan Pablo Stegmann is no fool. Nor is he someone unfamiliar with businesses and how to build leaders. He has a wide international business and academic background that includes holding 3 Ph.D degrees; 3 Masters degrees; a B.S.; and three postgraduate works in economics, finance, business strategy.

He has held senior leadership positions in almost every area of national and international business organization. These include general management, investment and commercial banking, finance, and strategic and knowledge management at leading multinational firms like Citibank, Bank of America, N.M. Rothchild (UK), and Telefonica. He also worked with leading consulting firms, such as McKinsey, Boston Consulting, A. T.  Kearney, Booz Allen, and others.

He has published several books prior to this present multi-volume work and has taught a wide spectrum of graduate and undergraduate courses in management, strategic management, integrated enterprise management, enterpreneurship, organization theory and behavior, foundations of business, international business, cross cultural communications, cultural environment global business, business consulting, business ethics, economics, international economics, financial management, strategic resources management, and quantitative methods.

I am most humbled that he considers me to be among his mentors. In this respect, I am especially delighted to note how, with some small assistance from my research, he has mastered the realization that the moral virtue of prudence (which creates in children and students the moral habit of docilitas [teachability!]) is a species of uncommon common sense that underlies all cultural and organizational development.

Evident to any psychologically human being is that, absent the moral and the practical virtue of intellectual prudence, no healthy human individual, organization, or culture can ever develop any habitual common sense–much less a level of habitual uncommon sense needed to grow and flourish longterm.

I encourage you to buy the 4-volumes linked to immediately below and tell others about them so that you and they can stand on the shoulders of a true organizational giant and learn how to apply these simple truths on a daily basis to improve all aspects of your daily life and that of the rest of us.

 

Peter A. Redpath is rector of The Adler-Aquinas Institute; CEO of the Aquinas School of Leadership; co-founder of the Gilson Society (USA), The International Etienne Gilson Society; and Founding Chairman of the Board of the Angelicum Academy. Presently Chair of the Thomistic Studies Graduate Concentration in Christian Wisdom at Holy Apostles College and Seminary, he is author/editor of 12 philosophical books and many articles and book reviews.

REVIEW BY LEIF EDVINSSON

     The work presented and packaged in the impressive three volumes has significant contributions to Leadership thought. It is very timely and apt, as we are in a time of rough/stormy knowledge navigation.

The work’s title, “A journey toward world peace”, introduces an ongoing renewal process toward a better future, two dimensions of Intellectual Capital (IC). The subtitles of the three books, creating Leadership to transform the political economy and organizations, reinforce the connection with IC’s process and renewal dimensions. Volume 2 focuses on the crucial role of spirituality in promoting inspiration and creation for the success of society, emphasizing the renewal dimension of IC. The first chapter focuses on creating knowledge and relationships, the two other dimensions of the IC. The following chapters explain the impact of knowledge creation, generating a vision of the future, building higher values, creating a Leadership culture, and promoting a continuous individual and social transformation process. Volume 2 concludes that spirituality promotes greatness and Leadership, introducing an understanding of Leadership as an ongoing renewal process with a social orientation. Volumes 3 and 4 investigate how our greatness and Leadership enrich the IC of nations and organizations, promoting social welfare.

Leadership is a challenging task, amplified by global geopolitics and the core of 3-dimensional knowledge navigation. The political economy is more than ever very dynamic. Part of it might be handled by learning life cycle maps from the late prof Jay Forrester at MIT. But also integrating forward into the contributions from Quantum Physics and Life Science, for example, genetic research. Such cultivation might offer life science perspectives to the old Leadership paradigms, as it will amplify the continuous RENEWAL dimensions beyond the often one-dimensional economic paradigm of growth.

Such navigation might be much more complex and require Leadership, as said above, of 3 D-dimensions.  But also a renewal of the agenda of Leadership, in itself. A Leadership of flow rather than stock. Some core dimensions of Leadership are still related to the geophysics of the Longitude theory. Consequently, Leadership navigation is about position, direction, and speed. A harmonizing Leadership by modern GPS tools.

Perhaps we need to innovate and upgrade the new institutional Agency for Social Welfare navigation. The Agency for this new Leadership might operate with a much more refined compass. Core metrics will be in the eco dimensions and flow of welfare beyond the bulk thinking.

As prof. Johan Rockström, Potsdam Environmental Institute, is advocating that we need to initiate the thrust as a global knowledge alliance to initiate, prototype, and cultivate the new sailing course for future generations after the Industrial Economics Era.

A growing, dynamic paradigm of Life Science presents a Leadership role much more integrated with multi-talented knowing. The dynamics in a new agile agency of a networked global construct are more characterized by Intangibles, soft assets, and vivid flow, close to a DAO – Decentralized  Autonomous Organisation.

This new Agency might be prototyped in a cross-disciplinary lab setup like we once prototyped in Skandia Future Center, Sweden. A new Navigation school and training program might be considered to initiate further learning and prototyping.

The escalating opportunity is waiting for our and your new initiatives.

 

Leif Edvinsson Ph.D. The World´s first director of Intellectual Capital, Skandia. The Worlds´ first holder of Professorship on Intellectual Capital Lund University, Sweden. Professor at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Appointed the Brain of the Year, The KEN Practitioner of the Year. Listed in The World´s 50 Most Influential Thinkers. Listed in Who is Who in the World. Luminary Award 2013 by Peter Drucker Foundation, Intel and European Commission for Thought Leadership. Knowledge Award 2017 together with UN.

REVIEW BY ALEJANDRO PREUSCHE

     Juan Pablo Stegmann’s masterpiece

First and foremost, this is a monumental piece of work. It is the expected outcome of a wonderful life journey devoted to rigorous researching, generous teaching, insightful writing and more importantly, to self-development and renewal. It hits the sweet spot of the balance between the personal and the professional lives.

As I read it, I saw the personal quest Stegmann initiated years ago which resulted in a marvelous synthesis between civilization, culture, and business pragmatism: that spirituality is at the center of our lives. This is the fountain of coherence that he has found and that he now shares with everyone seeking a fulfilling life in the world of business. On a personal note, the book allowed me to take stock of my own personal and professional journey. Lots of insights and reflections. I want to share some with the readers as well.

The book highlights spirituality’s role in building greatness and leadership, transforming the political economy and the business reality. I have seen countless examples of great business leaders who testified to the centrality of spirituality. Enrique Shaw was a successful business leader, a great human being, the founder of ACDE (Christian Association of Business Leaders), an extraordinary institution I had the honor to preside in. In line with the book’s insights, he promoted the mission of the business leader as linked to the fulfillment of three duties: service, progress, and human advancement. For him, the company was a community of life, an instrument for the dignification of the person. No wonder Shaw is in a canonization process in the Vatican.

The book provides a powerful interdisciplinary approach, connecting strategic management and political economy with our spirituality, greatness, and leadership. This was a challenge, as it required first simplifying and streamlining all strategic management and business disciplines in a simple model, incorporating the role of resources, something that I have done at McKinsey for years as a consultant and its CEO in Argentina.

As the book states, several Nobel Prize winners and the prestigious Strategic Management Society during the last decades have supported incorporating resources and economic thinking into strategic management. The book goes a step further and investigates how the greatness and leadership of everyone, of each stakeholder, provide crucial resources, human capital, social capital, process, and renewal capital, promoting the success of the organization and the community, providing a strongly needed human approach to strategic management. As an active member of the Impact Investing Movement (investments with an explicit intention and objective to deliver positive, meaningful, and measurable social or environmental outcomes in underserved areas, alongside a financial return), I strongly believe this is the crucial condition for success. Sustainable social and environmental impact is achieved through business innovation, only when their leaders are driven by a genuine orientation to those less privileged. Only this attitude will help bring about peace and progress.

The book also highlights the role of discernment, and its interaction with strategic management, solving strategic dilemmas for the organization’s success and social welfare. On my experience as a career coach to several hundred McKinsey Partners all over the world in the last 20 years, I have been privy to the crucial role of discernment in making high impact decisions. Any business leader, in fact, any leader, should get familiar with Stegmann’s comprehensive contribution to their success. This book is a must-read for any leader. It will surely become the main reference for those who want to lead a purposeful life.

 

Alejandro Federico Preusche, MS Engineering Universidad Catolica Argentina and MBA Stanford University. Former President of ACDE (Christian Association of Business Leaders), former consultant and CEO McKinsey & Company, Argentina, former a member of the Justice and Peace Commission of the Argentine Episcopal Conference, founder and Manager of Almado, a consulting and impact business developer, member of the Global Impact Investments Group.

REVIEW BY NARCISO MUÑOZ

     Perhaps the idea that best summarizes this monumental work developed by Juan Pablo Stegmann is the passage of the Good Samaritan, who helped a homeless, wounded and helpless man: it was neither the markets, nor the governments, but a man with a good heart.

For the past 5 years, with our families, friends and 500 volunteers, we helped the homeless of Miami, and along with them veterans, migrants, families, the elderly. We visited the streets where they are concentrated, supporting them with resources to improve their situation, recomposing their lives (health, work, finances, socialization and even spiritual support), trying to reunite them with their families, incorporating them into recovery programs, getting them permanent or transitional housing. Numerous donors and the state have supported us, providing 20 houses where the homeless can live, finding a community where they feel supported and regain their dignity.

“Hermanos de la Calle” brings together people who want to help, with those who need that help, helping to rehabilitate more than 100 homeless people in Miami per month, 30% of them children, and is expanding to other U.S. cities. Our task is to see the person, with his or her dignity, behind each homeless person, to help him or her transform and reintegrate into society.

As this book states, spirituality has been the driving force that led us to undertake this work; our spirituality is what makes us people, different from animals, it makes us brothers, it empowers us, it gives us that supernatural spark that we have and that we forget we have, or we do not dare to use it, or we were convinced that it is not there: but it is there. And when we use it, we impact many people, who begin to feel useful, unique and necessary. Our spirituality enhances and rediscovers that foggy mirror where we look for ourselves and sometimes, we do not see ourselves. Our spirituality brings us closer to God because we are made in his image and likeness, we have a little piece of God inside us.

I hope that many will read this book, so that it will help them to walk a path of personal and community growth, to discover the extraordinary value that spirituality has in our lives, to make us grow, be transformed, and to transform society in order to build a better world.

 

Narciso Muñoz, CFA, MS Political Sciences. President Hermanos de la Calle Foundation. Managing Director Alex Brown, a Division of Raymond James.

REVIEW BY JEFF STEAGALL

     Stegmann provides a thoughtful new approach to modern economics. Moving beyond the twentieth-century focus on rationality, Stegmann carefully integrates spirituality as a key input for economic and social growth. He cleverly shows how this approach leads to increased happiness, goodness, beauty, truth and unity, offering a vision for a better future for both individuals and society. Stegmann’s paradigm challenges us to re-evaluate what leadership means. He argues persuasively that leadership is the key component to personal and societal evolution, offering a statistical analysis that demonstrates that leadership correlates better with the most desirable social outcomes than either individualism or collectivism. Given the frightening situation that the left-versus-right paradigm has generated in our world, Stegmann’s work should be required reading for anyone interested in leadership, economic growth, societal evolution and global improvement.

 

Jeff Steagall Ph.D. Professor of economics, Buehler Chair in Leadership and former dean of the John B. Goddard School of Business & Economics at Weber State University. At University of North Florida former professor of economics, winner of multiple awards, creator and leader of the international business program which became one of four UNF flagship programs.

REVIEW BY ANDRES GALLO

     The work of Juan Pablo Stegmann is an intellectual endeavor of great importance for our culture of confrontation and extremism. Stegmann delves into deep spiritual and philosophical traditions to bring a bridge to solve matters at the individual, corporate and national levels. This is an impressive work, which should help all of us to question and understand the diversity of decisions we face both personally, at our companies, and as members of society.

This work starts at the personal level, looking for the significant impact of spirituality on our way of thinking and how our spiritual efforts impact our views and attitudes towards life problems. According to Stegmann’s research, spirituality is the source of our greatness and leadership. It builds our capacity to lead and approach our lives’ challenges.

Second, our leadership strengthens human, social, renewal, and process capital, which Edvinsson calls intellectual capital, the engine of economic growth, social justice, competitiveness, and problem-solving at the micro and macro levels. Accordingly, Stegmann refers to ten dimensions of spirituality linked to creating intellectual capital in society.

Third, Stegmann takes this framework into the political economy arena to create alternative solutions to the more traditional collectivist and individualist approaches. He shows the strengths and limitations of the epistemological foundations of both approaches, which is crucial to ending their confrontations. A leadership culture relies on a realist epistemology which eliminates the social fragmentation and radicalization generated by the confrontation between left and right, empowered by social media and populism. A leadership culture promotes knowledge and relationships, pillars of intellectual capital, social integration, and social harmony.

Stegmann closes this intellectual journey with a positive and hopeful framework that people can use to improve decision-making. He started with a very theoretical and abstract development of spirituality and guided us to a practical and applicable improvement framework. His examples and descriptions help the reader through this journey and bring the value of our spiritual growth in our lives.

This book can be extremely valuable for politicians, economists, business leaders, and any citizen to incorporate a new approach that promotes economic growth, social justice, and social harmony, creating a third political economy orientation based on leadership to solve unsolvable today’s problems. Furthermore, this book can be extremely valuable for anyone to learn how to build a leadership culture, transforming the person and society toward world peace.

 

Professor and Richard deRaismes Kip fellow at the Department of Economics and Geography and Director of the Flagship program in International Business at the Coggin College of Business, University of North Florida. Ph.D. in Economics at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. He has several publications in prestigious research journals.

OTHER CATHOLIC BUSINESS AND EDUCATION BOOKS

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